Schwab 'robo adviser' grows to $5.3 billion in its debut year

A Charles Schwab sign is pictured in the Manhattan borough of New York, October 10, 2015. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz - RTS3W8G

By Trevor Hunnicutt NEW YORK (Reuters) - Charles Schwab Corp's automated investment service grew about 29 percent to $5.3 billion at the end of the fourth-quarter, rising despite volatile U.S. financial markets, a spokeswoman said Wednesday. Schwab Intelligent Portfolios, a "robo adviser" that allocates cash among exchange-traded funds according to formulas based on client questionnaires, has been boosted by sign-ups from investors since its launch last March. The San Francisco-based company previously reported the program's total assets stood at $4.1 billion, as of Sept. 30, the spokeswoman, Alison Wertheim, said. Competition has spread in the digital financial-advice market. Fidelity Investments said in November it is building an automated portfolio-management service for individual investors, called Fidelity Go. BlackRock Inc , the world's largest money manager with $4.5 trillion under management, announced it would acquire the automated platform FutureAdvisor in August. Schwab makes Intelligent Portfolios available to clients directly and through the firm's affiliated third-party financial advisers. (Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Bill Trott)